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Author Topic: Slash Comments On Les Paul's Passing  (Read 4059 times)
FunkyMonkey
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« on: August 13, 2009, 02:21:51 PM »

Guitar, studio wizard Les Paul dies at 94

(CNN) -- Les Paul, whose innovations with the electric guitar and studio technology made him one of the most important figures in recorded music, has died, according to a statement from his publicists. Paul was 94.

Les Paul, whose innovations helped give rise to modern pop music, played guitar into his 90s.

Paul died in White Plains, New York, from complications of severe pneumonia, according to the statement.

Paul was a guitar and electronics mastermind whose creations -- such as multitrack recording, tape delay and the solid-body guitar that bears his name, the Gibson Les Paul -- helped give rise to modern popular music, including rock 'n' roll. No slouch on the guitar himself, he continued playing at clubs into his 90s despite being hampered by arthritis.

"If you only have two fingers [to work with], you have to think, how will you play that chord?" he told CNN.com in a 2002 phone interview. "So you think of how to replace that chord with several notes, and it gives the illusion of sounding like a chord."

Guitarists mourned the loss Thursday.

"Les Paul set a standard for musicianship and innovation that remains unsurpassed. He was the original guitar hero, and the kindest of souls," said Joe Satriani in a statement. "Last October I joined him onstage at the Iridium club in [New York], and he was still shredding. He was and still is an inspiration to us all." iReport.com: Do you play a Les Paul guitar?

"Les Paul was a shining example of how full one's life can be, he was so vibrant and full of positive energy," said Slash in a statement.

http://www.cnn.com/2009/SHOWBIZ/Music/08/13/obit.les.paul/

And from Twitter...

My friend & mentor Les Paul died today at 94, he was one of the most stellar human beings I've ever known, rest in peace Les.

about 1 hour ago from TwitterBerry

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FunkyMonkey
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« Reply #1 on: August 13, 2009, 02:38:08 PM »

And from Sebastian Bach...

RIP Les Paul. Got to meet u & c u jam with @slashhudson & Mike Monroe. Noone could have ever rocked without Les Paul, or a Les Paul.

about 2 hours ago from Digsby
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« Reply #2 on: August 13, 2009, 02:54:47 PM »

Remember a Slash interview where he talked about how Les blew him off the stage.
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FunkyMonkey
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« Reply #3 on: August 13, 2009, 03:00:35 PM »

A couple of videos from last November:

Slash at the Les Paul Tribute Concert

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6IbupryQnH8

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=idbi1GL0y-M
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« Reply #4 on: August 13, 2009, 03:36:58 PM »

Slash pays tribute to Les Paul

Guitar hero tips hat to electric guitar pioneer

Michael Leonard, Thu 13 Aug 2009

Guns N' Roses and Velvet Revolver guitarist Slash has paid tribute to the electric guitar pioneer Les Paul, who died today (13 August) aged 94.

Slash is one of the players most-identified with the iconic Gibson Les Paul, and over the last 25 years there are few players who have done more to continue to popularise the design.

Slash has his own signature range of Gibson and Epiphone Les Pauls.

Slash said: "Les Paul was a shining example of how full one's life can be, he was so vibrant and full of positive energy.

"I'm honoured and humbled to have known and played with him over the years, he was an exceptionally brilliant man."

http://www.musicradar.com/news/guitars/slash-pays-tribute-to-les-paul-216607
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Smoking Guns
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« Reply #5 on: August 13, 2009, 06:38:11 PM »

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zJMe-7z17kU

Part 2

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VDVUoOEsZHU

Slash and Les Jam, 1996.
« Last Edit: August 13, 2009, 06:40:43 PM by Smoking Guns » Logged
FunkyMonkey
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« Reply #6 on: August 14, 2009, 02:29:55 PM »

Guitar Legends: Slash Remembers Friend and Mentor Les Paul, A Total Fuckin' Maverick

Friday, Aug. 14 2009

It's not everyday you hear a story about a musician who once built a guitar out of a railroad track, but that's exactly what the late guitar legend Les Paul did. In the 1930s, less than thrilled with the sound quality of standard hollow body guitars at the time, Paul set out to design his own model. "I was interested in proving that a vibration-free top was the way to go," Les Paul has said. "I even built a guitar out of a railroad rail to prove it. What I wanted was to amplify pure string vibration, without the resonance of the wood getting involved in the sound."

More than just a player, Paul was an innovator and if the tools didn't exist to create the sounds he wanted to hear, well, then he made those tools himself. After several years of perfecting the model, in 1952 the music industry welcomed the Gibson Les Paul Goldtop, now known as one of the most famous solid body electric guitars in the world. In his article "Remembering Les Paul's Sound and Vision," Drew Tewksbury describes the guitar as having "the curves of a sportscar and that versatile sound that could be gentle as a stream or as fierce as a freight train. That beautiful resonance produced by the guitar's thick wooden body, lovingly dubbed 'the log,' channeled Slash's soaring guitar solo on 'November Rain' and Jimmy Page's crunchy riffs driving Led Zeppelin."

Yesterday after learning of Les Paul's death at 94 years old, L.A. Weekly caught up with Slash, a guitar legend in his own right, for an exclusive chat about the loss of not only a brilliant musician and innovator, but also a friend and mentor. "It's important for kids to know who Les was because when I first started playing, I thought Les Paul was the name of a guitar," Slash says of the days before he was schooled by other players like Jimmy Page, Jeff Beck and Eric Clapton on who Les Paul -- the man -- was. Eventually the two icons met, Paul took Slash under his wing, and they became fast friends. Slash remembers Les Paul as a "total fuckin' maverick" who was upbeat and funny, both polite and perverted, and who lived life to its fullest.

Slash: So, with Les...

L.A. Weekly: Yeah, sad day.

Slash: Les Paul invented the guitar that I use. The first guitar I ever got was a Les Paul copy [laughs]. First and foremost, he's an amazing fucking musician and jazz guitar payer, but he also invented a whole bunch of recording techniques that we use: reverb, multi-tracking, overdubbing, echo, delay... He invented them because they didn't make them back then. He thought he needed different things so he built them. He was a total fuckin' maverick. He was awesome. I've known him since 1991. The first time I met him I jammed with him at the club where he had a residency, Fat Tuesdays, in New York. Meeting and jamming with an icon like that was pretty overwhelming. He promptly just wiped the stage floor up with me [laughs], you know? It was one of those humbling experiences. But he sort of took me under his wing after that and we became friends. I would always gauge my progress as a guitar player by how well I did jamming with Les on any given day. [Laughs] He was like the barometer for my evolution as a guitar player.

It's an honor for me to have Les Paul models with my name on it. He's going to be missed. He was such a great guy, really warm, funny, very to the point, didn't mess around, didn't mince words, but had a really great heart and tons of energy. He was one of those people that set out to do something and accomplished things. He didn't sit around and wait for things to happen; he just went for it. He lived to be 94, always stayed true to his school as a musician, and kept inventing the whole time. He was a landmark influence on all us young musicians [laughs]. One of the reasons Jeff Beck, one of my favorites, is such a bitchin' guitar player is because he was so heavily influenced by Les Paul. I'm just paying tribute to the guy.

L.A. Weekly: Are there any particularly memorable moments that stand out above the others from when you'd hang out or jam together?

Slash: I just had a gig with him at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame a few months ago, a tribute to Les Paul, where a dozen guitar players all got together and jammed and then Les played at the end of the show. It was really one of those special events where some phenomenal guitar players got together and each one of them did their own little show, [laughs] including myself... it was another humbling experience... and when all that was done, Les got up there. And this is only a few months ago, so at 94 years old he gets up there and makes jokes into the microphone and has his whole band with him and fuckin' plays phenomenally. For the last 60 years he's had this major influence on guitar playing and the recording industry. So there he is, this little guy, so fuckin' full of life and vibrant and doesn't seem 94 years old, jamming out to this huge audience. It was really a special moment... it's hard for me to verbally explain it. Les was the kind of guy that anytime you were in his presence, he was always very upbeat, always cracking jokes, always making comments about the women present...

L.A. Weekly: [Laughs]

Slash: Very polite but very perverted at the same time, you know? [Laughs] The fact that he took a liking to me and took me under his wing was a huge honor. We always talked on the phone and that kind of stuff. It was special. It's important for kids to know who Les was because when I first started playing, I thought Les Paul was the name of a guitar. I didn't know it was a real person until I learned from guys like Jimmy Page and Jeff Beck and Eric Clapton. Obviously from that point on I researched and then finally got to meet him. Kids nowadays don't even really know that kind of history but it's important to have an understanding of that delay pedal that you're using and where the original concept came from [laughs]. Whenever you hear guitar harmonies recorded, like Brian May used to record harmonies on all of Queen's records, that was all Les Paul stuff. He invented the technique where you could layer guitars. Before that people just had to play live and that was it.

L.A. Weekly: Yeah. It's a sad day but for someone that lived such a full life...

Slash: Yeah, it's a drag that he's not here. I would have loved to have seen him again but at the same time he was such a great example of a life fully lived that everybody should just celebrate the fact that a human being could have such a great life and accomplish so much. You can never complain about being bored when you think about a guy like Les Paul, you know?

http://blogs.laweekly.com/westcoastsound/off-the-record/slash-les-paul-interview-icon/

Thanks to Blabbermouth.net
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FunkyMonkey
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« Reply #7 on: August 16, 2009, 07:44:27 PM »

It's from an older interview...

LES PAUL GUITAR IS SLASH'S IDENTITY

With the unfortunate death of the inventor of the electric guitar, Les Paul, Slash talks about why the Gibson Les Paul is so special to him

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LoGyy_ye4Rk&feature=channel_page
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Jdog0830
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« Reply #8 on: August 17, 2009, 08:02:51 PM »

i never knew how he made the 1st electric guitar from a railrood track thats crazy cool
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« Reply #9 on: August 19, 2009, 04:53:48 AM »

Public to pay tribute to Les Paul

Mourners will to pay their respects to guitar pioneer Les Paul at a public viewing before his hometown burial on Friday, it has been announced.

Friends and family are expected to attend the viewing at a technology museum in Milwaukee, before a private burial service in nearby Waukesha.

Paul, who died last Thursday aged 94, was credited with building one of the first solid-body electric guitars.

A private funeral service is planned to take place in New York on Wednesday.

A reception is also due to be held at the city's Gibson showroom afterwards, according to Paul's manager Michael K. Braunstein.

'Brilliant man'

Gibson was the firm which sold Paul's guitars after they became commercially available in 1952.

Following his death, caused by complications arising from pneumonia, tributes poured in from the world of music.

Guns N' Roses star Slash called Paul "an exceptionally brilliant man".

"Les Paul was a shining example of how full one's life can be. He was so vibrant and full of positive energy. I'm honoured and humbled to have known and played with him over the years," he said.

U2's The Edge, closely associated with the sound pioneered by Paul, called him "a legend of the guitar and a true renaissance man."

Paul grew up in Waukesha and picked up his first guitar there at the age of nine.

His final concert in Milwaukee will be shown at the public viewing on Friday, while the Discovery Museum's Les Paul exhibit will be free of charge.

His burial plot will be large enough to allow members of the public to visit, the manager of Waukesha's Prairie Home Cemetery has said.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/8208887.stm
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FunkyMonkey
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« Reply #10 on: August 19, 2009, 03:21:58 PM »

Going to pay my respects at Les Paul's funeral today. #fb

30 minutes ago from TwitterBerry
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« Reply #11 on: August 19, 2009, 09:57:44 PM »

Les' memorial was really nice, just friends & family, very private & low key in NYC. Les Paul is very loved & will always be with us. #fb

about 1 hour ago
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« Reply #12 on: August 22, 2009, 05:17:41 PM »

NEW YORK - AUGUST 19: Slash attends Les Paul's funeral at the Frank E. Campbell Funeral Chapel on August 19, 2009 in New York City. (Photo by Bennett Raglin/WireImage)

http://www.gettyimages.com/Search/Search.aspx?contractUrl=2&language=en-US&family=editorial&assetType=image&p=saul%20hudson%20les%20paul%20funeral&src=standard
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« Reply #13 on: August 20, 2010, 03:18:02 PM »

Music World Remembers Les Paul

August 12, 2010

Musicians including Slash, Billy Gibbons and Al Di Meola remember guitar legend and sound innovator Les Paul.

Video: http://edition.cnn.com/video/?/video/world/2010/08/12/icon.les.paul.anniversary.cnn

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« Reply #14 on: August 22, 2010, 02:52:35 PM »

Music World Remembers Les Paul

August 12, 2010

Musicians including Slash, Billy Gibbons and Al Di Meola remember guitar legend and sound innovator Les Paul.

Video: http://edition.cnn.com/video/?/video/world/2010/08/12/icon.les.paul.anniversary.cnn



A little more info.

SLASH Among Musicians Remembering LES PAUL In CNN's 'Icon' - Aug. 22, 2010

According to Gibson.com, the CNN International program "Icon" will celebrate the life and legacy of Les Paul with a special edition of the show on August 26 at 11:30 and 16:30 GMT. The show will feature a visit to the Gibson Custom Shop to watch Paul's signature guitar being lovingly crafted by the greatest luthiers in the world. The program will also travel to New York City's Iridium Jazz Club, where Paul played with the LES PAUL TRIO until the age of 93. The show will also feature interviews with some of the biggest stars in music paying tribute to the Wizard of Waukesha, including Sir Paul McCartney, Slash, Billy Gibbons and Al Di Meola. Les Paul's son, Russ Paul, will also look back on the life of his famous father.

http://www.roadrunnerrecords.com/blabbermouth.net/news.aspx?mode=Article&newsitemID=144913
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